18 July 2026

枪口下的“自治”:从中共人大常委会官方文件,看中共军警如何垂帘听政、彻底绞杀新疆



人们谈起新疆,脑海中浮现的往往是满街的监控探头、荷枪实弹的巡逻哨兵。外界总以为,中共军队和武警在新疆扮演的只是“场外执行者”的角色——只负责在街头、在集中营里搞肉体镇压。

然而,翻开中共全国人大常委会的官方公报,一个更令人毛骨悚然的制度黑箱被彻底打开:这些负责在街头维稳、镇压少数民族的军警巨头,脱下作训服,换上军礼服,直接堂而皇之地坐进了新疆的地方立法与最高权力机构。

他们不仅在现场看管着那些维吾尔族、哈萨克族的平民代表,更在幕后一手操控着新疆省长、法院院长、检察院院长的生死大权。

所谓的“民族区域自治”,在人大公报那冰冷的数字面前,早已被枪杆子绞杀得粉碎。

一、 枪杆子如何预演3000人的投票?

在政治学中,人们常常被“数量的多数”所迷惑。

以第十四届全国人大为例,近3000名代表中,来自解放军和武警部队的代表团只有281人,占比不到10%。如果在西方民主社会,这10%的少数派根本无足轻重。

然而,在中共的政治逻辑里,决定权力的从来不是“人头数”,而是“物理破坏力”

那两百多个身穿军装、佩戴肩章的军人方阵,就成了会场里最恐怖的政治符号。对于剩下的2600多名平民代表(尤其是少数民族代表)来说,这不叫开会,这叫“带枪恐吓”。你手里按下的每一个表决器按钮,背后都有几十万现代化正规军、机关枪和坦克的影子在注视着你。

但故事到这里,才仅仅掀开了套娃的最外一层。

二、 新疆人大公告里的惊天黑箱:谁在替维吾尔人选“省长”?

真正致命的摧毁,发生在地方。

中共名义上推行“民族区域自治”,按照《自治法》,新疆维吾尔自治区的主席(相当于省长)必须由维吾尔族人担任。看起来,当地少数民族似乎掌握了行政管理权。

但新疆人大常委会公开披露的第十四届全国人大代表选举结果,狠狠戳穿了这个谎言。公报显示:

2023年1月18日,新疆第十四届人大第一次会议选出了代表新疆出席北京全国人大的60名代表。

 


而在这个决定新疆命运的省级人大里面,赫然坐着至少32名直接听命于中共中央军委、由驻疆解放军和武警部队“硬编码”派进去的军人代表和55名新疆生产建设兵团的兵团代表。


这意味着什么?

这意味着,那60个代表新疆去北京开会、名义上“代表维吾尔族、哈萨克族等少数民族利益”的平民代表,在跨出新疆之前,首先必须由这87把“枪杆子”在地方人大会议上完成严密的筛选和政审。

更荒谬的是,这87名军警代表,在地方人大里拥有否决的实质性绝对权威。他们坐在大厅里,审议着新疆省长的政府工作报告,审议着新疆高级法院院长、检察院院长的司法报告。

一个少数民族省长,哪怕他再不顺从,如果不能让台下坐着的这87名军警代表满意,他甚至连候选人名单都进不去。

三、 行刑者变成了选官人:苏勇们的“双重面孔”

在这张被曝光的87人军人代表名单里,有一个名字极其刺眼——苏勇。他的官方头衔是:中国人民武装警察部队新疆总队副参谋长

在海外地缘政治和军事研究中,中共的“武警(PAP)”根本不是普通警察,而是不折不扣的准军事部队(Paramilitary)。而“副参谋长”,则是直接负责这支部队作战、训练、反恐维稳以及兵力部署的最高军事指挥官之一。

这就构成了一个极其魔幻、甚至残酷的政治寓言:

  • 在场外: 苏勇是铁腕镇压的指挥官。他手下的武装力量,此刻可能正全副武装地驻扎在克拉玛依、喀什或者乌鲁木齐的街头,随时可以封锁交通、接管大楼,甚至限制少数民族同胞的肉体自由。

  • 在场内: 苏勇摇身一变,成了“人民代表”。他拿着选票,神圣不可侵犯地坐在新疆人大的大礼堂里,替本地的维吾尔人、哈萨克人“筛选”他们的司法官员。

当那些少数民族法官、检察官在台上战战兢兢地宣读工作报告时,他们迎上的不是民意的目光,而是手握兵权的苏勇们的审视。报告里关于“维稳”的字眼够不够硬?抓的人够不够多?

当街头的行刑者变成了会场里的选官人,所谓的“司法独立”与“民族自治”,变成了一场彻底的、由军警导演的提线木偶戏。

结语:不加遮掩的硬核统治

最令人深思的是,中共官方对于这种“军警垂帘听政”的结构,在公报中从来不加遮掩。他们白纸黑字地记录着这些人是由“解放军选出”、“武警选出”,而不是“新疆人民选出”。

这种不遮掩,本身就是一种最高层级的政治恐吓。它在用制度的语言告诉所有平民代表:你们的权力是 transactional(交易性的、派生的),而军警的权力是 foundational(基础性的、绝对的)。

三月份在北京人民大会堂里按下的、赞成率接近100%的表决器,和国庆阅兵式上隆隆驶过长安街的重型坦克,在底层逻辑上是无缝缝合的。

新疆的自治,早就在这种“枪杆子进会场”的套娃选举中,被彻底绞杀得尸骨无存。那2600多个平民代表的面孔,不过是长官桌子上的橡皮图章,在替暴力的意志,盖上合法的印记。#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

Inside Sichuan's Congress: 28 Active-Duty PLA Officers and Beijing's Handpicked Delegates



On January 15, 2023, the Third Plenary Meeting of the First Session of the 14th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress selected 147 deputies to the 14th National People’s Congress (NPC). This total matches the number later published in Bulletin No. 2 (2023) of the NPC Standing Committee.

Among those selected were several candidates nominated by the CCP Central Committee, including:

  • Zhao Leji

  • Li Ji

  • Song Rui

  • Tian Xuejun

  • Du Hangwei

  • Du Jiang

  • Xi Zhengping

  • Zhong Zhihua

  • Liu Zhenfang

  • Zhang Xingmin

  • Zheng Gongcheng

The PLA Bloc in the 14th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress

One week earlier, on January 8, 2023, the Standing Committee of the 13th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress announced the membership of the 14th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress. The official roster included 30 active-duty People’s Liberation Army (PLA) officers.

The continued presence of a sizable military delegation illustrates how the PLA, under the command of the CCP Central Military Commission (CMC), maintains institutional representation within provincial legislatures that are responsible for selecting deputies to China’s highest legislative body.

The 13th National People’s Congress Selection (2018)

On January 30, 2018, the First Session of the 13th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress chose 148 deputies to the 13th National People’s Congress, matching the total published in Bulletin No. 2 (2018) of the NPC Standing Committee.

The delegation included numerous candidates nominated by the CCP Central Committee, including:

  • Wang Yang

  • Cao Jianming

  • Du Yupo

  • Danzeng Angben (Tibetan)

  • Li Jiayang

  • Zhao Xiangeng

  • Jidi Majia (Yi)

  • Xu Yanhao

  • Gao Hongwei

  • Zhang Ping

  • He Hong

Twenty-Eight Active-Duty PLA Officers in the 13th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress

On January 23, 2018, the Standing Committee of the 12th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress published the membership of the incoming 13th Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress. The official list included 28 active-duty PLA officers serving under the command and leadership of the CCP Central Military Commission.

The officers included:

  • Xian Weiping — Director, Directly Subordinate Affairs Bureau, Joint Staff Department, PLA Western Theater Command

  • Li Yang — Director of the Political Department, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Li Yong — Commander, Ganzi Military Subdistrict, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Li Bo — Director, General Office, Political Work Department, PLA Western Theater Command

  • Li Yuanxiang — Commander, Chengdu Garrison, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Li Jialin — Deputy Director, Political Work Bureau, Chengdu Military Region Transition Office

  • Wu Dilun — Political Commissar, Ziyang Military Subdistrict

  • He Qiwei — Deputy Chief of Staff, PLA 77th Group Army

  • Leng Zhiyi — Political Commissar, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Wang Zeyuan — Political Commissar, Mianyang Military Subdistrict

  • Zhang Li — Director, Political Work Department, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Luo Jun — Political Commissar, Guangyuan Military Subdistrict

  • Zheng Jiansen — Deputy Commander, Neijiang Military Subdistrict

  • Jiang Yongshen — Commander, Sichuan Provincial Military District

  • Xu Chengxiang — Commander, Meishan Military Subdistrict

  • Qin Guanglong — Political Commissar, Panzhihua Military Subdistrict

  • Xia Lizuo — Commander, Yibin Military Subdistrict

  • Huang Yong — Deputy Political Commissar, PLA Unit 63820 (Military Space Forces)

  • Huang Zhihui — Political Commissar, Dazhou Military Subdistrict

  • Dong Zhiyong — Commander, Luzhou Military Subdistrict

  • Jiang Jinan — Commander, Nanchong Military Subdistrict

  • Pu Lunfu — Deputy Commander, Guang’an Military Subdistrict

  • Cai Weisu — Deputy Chief of Staff, PLA Air Force, Western Theater Command

  • Cai Zhange — Deputy Political Commissar and Secretary of the Discipline Inspection Commission, PLA Unit 32058 (Strategic Support Force)

  • Liao Shenqiang — Commander, Aba Military Subdistrict

  • Tan Yan — Director of the Medical Training Section and Associate Chief Physician, General Hospital of the Chengdu Military Region

  • Li Zhaoyang — Political Commissar, Bazhong Military Subdistrict

  • Pan Bo — Commander, Liangshan Military Subdistrict

Collectively, these officers occupied positions across nearly every major military command structure within Sichuan, including the provincial military district, multiple military subdistricts, the Western Theater Command, the 77th Group Army, the PLA Air Force, the Strategic Support Force, and military medical institutions.

Neijiang Delegation: Local Representatives and Military Participation

The Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress delegation from Neijiang consisted of 39 deputies, selected on December 29, 2017, during the Third Session of the Seventh Neijiang Municipal People’s Congress.

The selection meeting was attended by Xiao Yun, Political Commissar of the PLA Neijiang Military Subdistrict.

The selected deputies were:

Ding Zhao, Ma Bo (Tujia), Wang Qigang, Deng Lijun, Feng Yuan, Zhu Ping, Ren Xiaochun, Xiang Xuelian, Liu Ying, Liu Huiying, Liu Peiquan, Li Donghong, Li Faqiang, Li Dawei, Li Houqiang, Li Bohong, Li Haibin, Yang Xingping, Wu Huo, Wu Yunmei, Wu Qiubai, Qiu Xiaoqiu, He Qing, Zhang Yong, Zhang Jing, Zhang Youmei, Chen Yuchun, Chen Xiuying, Zheng Guihua, Guan Zhongquan, Hu Xiaolong, Tang Weidong, Tang Zhaoqiang, Tao Shengyuan, Huang Chunjiang, Liang Xiaoning, Han Zhilong, Zeng Hongyong, and Zhan Cairong.

The Seventh Neijiang Municipal People’s Congress also included, among others, active-duty officers serving under the leadership of the CCP Central Military Commission, including:

  • Li Zhilun, Political Commissar of the PLA Dongxing District People’s Armed Forces Department, Neijiang.

  • Lu Jiangtao, Director of the Mobilization Department, PLA Neijiang Military Subdistrict.

These records illustrate that military representation extended beyond the provincial legislature into municipal people’s congresses, where active-duty PLA officers simultaneously participated in local legislative bodies while remaining within the CCP’s military command structure.

Military Representation and the Absence of Federal Separation

From the perspective of the United States constitutional system, the composition of Sichuan’s People’s Congress highlights several institutional features that differ fundamentally from representative government under a federal constitutional democracy.

1. Military Officers Serving as Legislators

In the United States, active-duty military officers are institutionally separated from legislative politics. Congress is composed of civilians elected through competitive elections, while the armed forces remain under civilian control and do not receive reserved seats in either the House of Representatives or the Senate.

By contrast, the Sichuan Provincial People’s Congress included dozens of active-duty PLA officers simultaneously serving as legislators while remaining within the military chain of command headed by the CCP Central Military Commission. Their legislative positions existed alongside—not instead of—their military appointments.

This arrangement effectively integrates military command structures into the provincial legislature rather than maintaining a clear institutional separation between the armed forces and lawmaking.

2. Indirect Selections Rather Than Direct Voter Choice

Members of China’s National People’s Congress are generally not directly elected by the public. Instead, provincial people’s congresses select NPC deputies.

As a result, the composition of provincial legislatures has a direct influence on the composition of China’s national legislature. When provincial congresses include substantial numbers of active-duty military officers and centrally nominated political figures, those institutions also participate in selecting members of the country’s highest legislative body.

This differs significantly from the United States, where Members of Congress are chosen directly by voters in their respective states and congressional districts.

3. Centralized Candidate Placement

The Sichuan selections also demonstrate the role of candidates nominated by the CCP Central Committee.

Senior national officials—including Politburo Standing Committee members, ministers, academics, and other central figures—were selected through Sichuan despite many having no obvious political constituency within the province itself.

In the United States’ federal system, members of Congress must stand for election in the states or congressional districts they represent and depend upon voters in those jurisdictions for electoral legitimacy. The placement of nationally selected candidates into provincial delegations reflects a fundamentally different model of political representation.

4. Legislative Independence

Under the U.S. constitutional framework, the legislative, executive, and judicial branches are institutionally separate, and elected legislators are expected to exercise independent judgment, including the ability to oppose executive proposals.

The People’s Congress system operates under a different institutional framework in which the CCP exercises overall political leadership across state institutions. Consequently, the legislature does not function as an independent branch in the same manner as Congress under the U.S. Constitution.

Why This Matters

Why This Matters

To an American audience, these records illustrate far more than a different electoral system. They demonstrate the concentration of military authority, party control, and legislative power within the same political structure.

In the United States, the Constitution is built upon the principles of civilian control of the military, separation of powers, federalism, and free elections. Active-duty military officers do not occupy reserved seats in Congress, national party leaders cannot simply be assigned to represent states where they have no electoral constituency, and voters—not higher political authorities—determine who represents them.

The Sichuan records reveal a fundamentally different system. Active-duty PLA officers simultaneously served as legislators while remaining in the military chain of command under the CCP Central Military Commission. Senior CCP leaders were placed into provincial delegations through Party nomination rather than local electoral competition. Provincial legislatures then selected deputies to the National People’s Congress through an indirect process rather than direct popular vote.

Rather than acting as an independent check on political or military power, the legislature incorporates the military command structure itself. Instead of separating military authority, Party leadership, and legislative power, the system consolidates them within a single political hierarchy dominated by the CCP.

Imagine if dozens of active-duty U.S. generals, Pentagon commanders, and military base commanders simultaneously served as voting members of a state legislature responsible for electing Members of Congress, while national party leaders were assigned to that legislature regardless of where they lived or campaigned. Such an arrangement would be viewed as incompatible with the constitutional principles of civilian government, representative democracy, and federalism. Yet this is precisely the institutional structure reflected in the official records of the Sichuan People's Congress.

2023年1月15日四川省第十四届人大第一次会议第三次全体会议选出147名四川省第十四届全国人大代表, 与全国人大常委会公报2023年第2号公布的数量相符,中共中央提名的候选人包括赵乐际、李季、宋锐、田学军、杜航伟、杜江、奚正平、钟志华、刘振芳、张兴敏、郑功成

2023年1月8日四川省第十三届人大常委会公布四川省第十四人大代表有30名现役军人。

四川省第十三届人大第一次会议于2018年1月30日选出第十三届全国人大代表148名,与全国人大常委会公报2018年第2号公布的数量相符,包括中共中央提名的人选:汪洋,曹建明,杜玉波,丹珠昂奔(藏族),李家洋,赵宪庚,吉狄马加(彝族),徐延豪,高红卫,张平,贺泓。

2018年1月23日四川省第十二届人大常委会公报四川省第十三届人大里面有中共中央军委指挥、领导的 28名现役军人,包括:

  1. 先卫平,中国人民解放军西部战区联合参谋部直属工作局局长

  2. 李阳,中国人民解放军四川省军区政治部主任

  3. 李勇,中国人民解放军四川省甘孜军分区司令员

  4. 李博,中国人民解放军西部战区政治工作部办公室主任

  5. 李元祥,中国人民解放军四川省成都警备区司令员

  6. 李加林,中国人民解放军成都军区善后工作办公室政治工作局副主任

  7. 吴弟伦,中国人民解放军四川省资阳军分区政治委员

  8. 何其伟,中国人民解放军陆军第七十七集团军副参谋长

  9. 冷志义,中国人民解放军四川省军区政委

  10. 汪泽元,中国人民解放军绵阳军分区政委

  11. 张力,中国人民解放军四川省军区政治工作局主任

  12. 罗军,中国人民解放军四川省广元军分区政治委员

  13. 郑建森,中国人民解放军四川省内江军分区副司令员

  14. 姜永申,中国人民解放军四川省军区司令员

  15. 胥成相,中国人民解放军四川省眉山军分区司令员

  16. 秦光龙,中国人民解放军四川省攀枝花军分区政治委员

  17. 夏礼作,中国人民解放军四川省宜宾军分区司令员

  18. 黄勇,中国人民解放军63820部队副政治委员(中国人民解放军军事航天部队)

  19. 黄智辉,中国人民解放军四川省达州军分区政治委员

  20. 董智勇,中国人民解放军四川省泸州军分区司令员

  21. 蒋济南,中国人民解放军四川省南充军分区司令员

  22. 蒲伦富,中国人民解放军四川省广安军分区副司令员

  23. 蔡伟素,中国人民解放军西部战区空军副参谋长

  24. 蔡战戈,中国人民解放军32058部队副政治委员兼纪委书记(中国人民解放军战略支援部队)

  25. 廖申强,中国人民解放军四川省阿坝军分区司令员

  26. 谭艳(女),中国人民解放军成都军区总医院医务部科训科科长兼副主任医师

  27. 黎召阳,中国人民解放军四川省巴中军分区政治委员

  28. 潘波,中国人民解放军四川省凉山军分区司令员

来自内江市的四川省人大代表有39名,由内江市第七届人大第三次会议2017年12月29日选出,中国人民解放军内江军分区政委肖云参加了该会议,包括:

  丁兆 马波(土家族) 王启刚

  邓利军 冯远(女) 朱萍(女)

  任晓春 向雪莲(女) 刘英(女)

  刘会英(女) 刘佩全 李东洪

  李发强 李达伟 李后强

  李伯宏(女) 李海斌 杨兴平

  吴惑 吴云梅(女) 吴秋白

  邱笑秋 何清(女) 张 勇

  张静(女) 张友美(女) 陈玉春

  陈秀英(女) 郑桂华(女) 官忠全

  胡小龙 唐卫东 唐昭强

  陶生元 黄春江 梁效宁

  韩志龙 曾宏勇 詹财荣

内江市第七届人大代表包括但不限于中共中央军委领导的中国人民解放军内江市东兴区人武部政委李志伦,中国人民解放军内江军分区动员处处长鲁江涛

#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

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